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Police say her death is being treated as unexplained but is not believed to be suspicious.

Lady Lucan was one of the last people to see her husband John Bingham, the seventh Earl of Lucan, alive before he disappeared.

John Richard Bingham, Earl of Lucan, and Veronica Duncan after their marriage (Image: Hulton Archive)

He vanished after the murdered body of Sandra Rivett, nanny to his three children, was found at the family home at 46 Lower Belgrave Street, central London, on November 7 1974.

Even though he was officially declared dead by the High Court in 1999, Lord Lucan has reportedly been sighted in Australia, Ireland, South Africa and New Zealand, and there are even claims that he fled to India and lived life as a hippy called "Jungly Barry".

Lord Lucan vanished after the nanny to his three childrne was found murdered at the family home in 1974 (Image: PA)

The same night as his disappearance, the attacker also turned on Lady Lucan, beating her severely before she managed to escape and raise the alarm at a nearby pub, the Plumbers Arms.

Lucan's car was later found abandoned and soaked in blood in Newhaven, East Sussex, and an inquest jury declared the wealthy peer the killer a year later.

Roger Bray was the first journalist on Lord Lucan's doorstep the morning after the dramatic events unfolded, and wrote one of the first newspaper reports about the mystery surrounding the man with the famous moustache.

Head barman at the in the Plumbers Arms Derrick Whitehouse, who was 44, told Mr Bray that Lady Lucan "staggered" in and she said: "I think my neck has been broken. He tried to strangle me."

The barman said Lady Lucan was "just in a delirious state", telling Mr Bray: "She just said 'I'm dying'. She kept going on about the children. 'My children, my children', she said. She came staggering in through the door and I gave her all the assistance I possibly could. I've only seen her in here once before."

Lady Lucan, wife of missing Lord Lucan, pictured at her London home in 1977 (Image: Sunday Mirror)

Mr Whitehouse told Mr Bray that she had "various head wounds" that were "quite severe", adding: "She was covered in blood. She'd been bleeding profusely when she came in."

Earlier this year, Lady Lucan, formally named Veronica, Dowager Countess of Lucan, gave a television interview in which she said she believed Lord Lucan had made the "brave" decision to take his own life.

'He could have hit harder. They were measured blows'

Ahead of the hour-long documentary interview called "Lord Lucan: My Husband, The Truth", Radio Times magazine shared some of her words with director Michael Waldman.

She said: "I would say he got on the ferry and jumped off in the middle of the Channel in the way of the propellers so that his remains wouldn't be found - I think quite brave."

During the ITV programme she spoke of her own depression and her husband's violent nature following their marriage in 1963.

Describing how he would beat her with a cane to get the "mad ideas out of your head", she said: "He could have hit harder. They were measured blows.

"He must have got pleasure out of it because he had intercourse (with me) afterwards."

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